Cooks Country (by Cook's Illustrated) is looking for funny kitchen disaster stories

marilynfl

Moderator
...only my post keeps crashing when I try to add the URL (or possibly the text I copied?)

Obviously I'm violating something somewhere.

I'll keep trying to get the info for you all.

 
So many stories...So little time!! We have shared many memorable laughs w/ FK & Gails. The one

that always makes me chuckle is Cyn's Lobster story. To this day, I can not see a lobster w/o thinking what it would look like swinging a knife!!

Always puts a smile on my face!! do not try this at home

Unfortunately, I can't find the story on Gails search...

Barb
Edited after I re-read initial post...Poor Cyn with Sutures...

 
Found it! And I'm still laughing after all these years...submit this, CynUpstateNY!

Cyn/Upstate NY: One of the dumbest and dangerous things I've ever done>>>
Posted: Feb 9, 2003 8:54 AM

When we were first married, I decided to surprise my husband with a lobster dinner. Thinking bigger is better I purchased a 5 lb. lobster. While I had never cooked the lobster myself I had seen him do it numerous times. Not wanting the taste of rubber bands in the lobster water, the first thing I did was to lift the giant lobster to a cutting board and remove the bands from the claws. (Pretty stupid, I know) The lobster started waving the claws around and I knew I had to place something hard in the claw so it would clamp down and I could grab it so I picked up the closest item, which was my grandmother's carbon steel chef's knife, and placed the wooden handle between the lobster's claw. The lobster began waving the razor sharp knife around and when I went to grab it, took a 3 inch slice off my finger. I yelled for my neighbor, he threw a towel over the lobster and threw it onto the back porch and drove me to the E.R. for sutures. It didn't take long for the story to make the rounds that a young woman in the E.R. was knifed by a giant lobster. I still have the scar!

 
Marilyn, thanks for the link. I haven't laughed so much in a while. All great stories!

My disaster doesn't seem so bad. Once making my smoothie in my VitaMix I forget I had it on high and I didn't have the lid on yet. I turned it on and my smoothie went all over the cabinets, all over the ceiling, all over the applies and floor. What a mess!

One other time I had folks for dinner and wondered why the table seemed a little sparce. I forgot and left the potatoes in the oven. I didn't find them til after the couple had left.

 
Marilyn you need to send this one in......

I c&p'd this to one of my files - it is priceless!!

The warning signs were all there: It was December and fudge and caramel recipes filled my screen while hand-wrapped candies filled my dreams. I inexplicably found myself at the checkout counter with 20 pounds of sugar and had no memory of why mounds of pecans sat on the kitchen table. One morning I was horrified to awaken and find “The Joy of Cooking” laying on the pillow next to me, wide open to “Candies and Confections” for all the world to see.

Hello. My name is Marilyn and I am a Failed Candy Make-aholic.

It started the way all addictions do, with an adrenaline rush that accompanies a perfect first attempt. It was peanut brittle and I was 12.

In a way, I was fortunate. Being from Pennsylvania, we were probably the only state that included the town of Hershey in the geography syllabus. I already had a major lust for chocolate, so making sugar candy from scratch failed to thrill me. I read about Divinity, Sea Foam and Fondant in my mother’s cookbooks, but considered the exercise pointless. Why spend hours making candy when I could buy a Hershey’s bar?

An adult long before visions of real sugared plums began dancing in my head, I was brave when it came to making pastries, but candy chemistry scared me. My trial by molten sugar came four years ago when I was seduced by Michael in Phoenix’s “Chocolate Macadamia Nut Caramels.” I documented that travesty in “Travails of a Novice Caramel Maker” and should have recognized then the slippery slope I climbed.

The following year, I fought the sugar urge but fell when Oreo Truffles were posted. I believe I have Deb in MI to thank for that curse. I could not prepare those nuggets of heaven fast enough. Each batch had to be better than the last, with the thrills rising exponentially as stores advertised “Buy One Get One Free” Oreo offers. My obsession grew along with my waistband.

During the Holiday Hell of 2004 I became addicted to making Gayle in MO’s chocolate fudge. Gayle is one of those people who have a natural affinity for making candy. I feel certain that if the Hubble camera zoom-lensed into her Missouri kitchen, we would find Gayle at the stove whipping up tins of fudge, standing on one foot with her hand tied behind her back.

But I am here to admit—in public—that unlike the 4,386 other posters who made her fudge recipe, I had no easy time of it. Not the first time, nor the second, nor the third time. The more I failed, the more I was determined to repeat the recipe until I succeeded. It is possible that my glucose level during that period left the realm of integer numbers and sailed right into the Imaginary range. The fourth attempt brought success and cathartic release and I was safe for another year.

Last year we diverted from chocolate and prepared the village idiot’s version of candied walnuts—the one that does not involve a candy thermometer. Sweet Baby Jesus, that was a good year.

Unfortunately, that brings us to the Here and Now. Yesterday I attempted to make Dic’s “Never-Fail Caramels”. Eighty-year old Dic is possibly one of the sweetest persons on this earth and originally hails from Missouri, where apparently the DNA for candy originated. This summer he generously shared with me his secret recipe for never-fail caramels and I am here to unequivocally state that I am the exception to his rule.

I started a batch at 3:30 yesterday afternoon and finished them at 9:10 pm. Five and a half hours of my life, gone forever. It is a bitter story, ending in sadness and non-caramels, so the faint of heart would do best to click the little X at the upper right of your screen and leave now. Those still reading should remember that you have been warned.

Anyone schooled in successful candy making might have recognized that a recipe which specifies QUARTS of ingredients could prove difficult. I, on the other hand, thought that was the reason behind the “never-fail” part of the title. The instructions were also strange: divide the ingredients into thirds and cook 1/3 to hard ball stage (248 degrees), then add the next third to hard-ball and so on until all is cooked. Odd, but let me repeat again: I thought that was part of the “never-fail” bit.

I was wrong.

Much like a CSI investigation, I will provide a time-line of the crime scene. At 3:30 I pulled out my large 12 quart Calphalon and started Phase 1 by adding the first 1/3 portion of ingredients.

At 4:50, the candy thermometer STILL read 221° and I realized that humidity might be the issue. So I ran around the house, shutting all the windows and cranking up the A/C. Observant readers may remember that less than a week ago, I gave AGM in Cape Cod A/C advice with regard to humidity and caramels. Did I listen to my own advice? Heck no.

At this point, I added a second identical candy thermometer to the pot and—glancing from one to the other—noticed they were 5 degrees different. Mentally slapping my forehead, I realized I had not verified the accuracy of either thermometer. (This is where, in the split screen of my life, Gayle is telling the host of FoodTV, “Thermometer? I don’t use a candy thermometer.”)

I pulled out my Polder and dangled the probe into the bubbling C12H22O11 where it registered yet a THIRD temperature. Frustrated and taking it out on the pot, I stirred the bottom (even though the Joy of Cooking said not to stir) and blackened bits of sugar swirled up to the surface. With sickened heart, I realized Phase 1 was lost.

Undeterred, I grabbed a smaller stockpot and added the second batch of ingredients to start the process over again. While the sugars melted, I slipped all three thermometers into a pot of water, brought it to a rolling boil and monitored it for 10 minutes. At sea level, thermometers should read 212 degrees F. in boiling water. But we’re talking me here. Two read 210° and one read 216°.

Now, with the caramel bubbling on the front burner and the thermometers boiling away on the back burner, the Truly Observant reader will connect the dots and notice the steam rising up from the back burner. In cleverer circles, this is known as “humidity.” Standing in my now air-conditioned kitchen, I was blatantly adding humidity a mere 8” from where the sugar was struggling to caramelize.

If I may redirect for a moment: there are certain biblical references that correlate the number 666 to Satan. And even though I have no rabbinical or theological training, I feel certain that 221° should be reserved for that relationship. Batch Number One sat at 221° for an HOUR before I finally caved and added Batch #2 to the mix. I believe a swear word accompanied that addition. Within 45 minutes, the sugar tripled in volume at 226° as I realized with sickened heart that the third batch would never fit in this smaller pot. Transferring everything back to the Calphalon, I watched the temperature sink back to 221° where it stayed for yet another hour. “221° = Satan” I’m telling you. I’ll bet if you look out there, there’s a “Damian’s Devilish Caramels” somewhere.

Desperate at this point, I read through the Joy of Cooking and found salvation when THEIR caramel recipes said to boil until 238°. Rays of hope bubbled in my heart, realizing this would knock 10 degrees from my countdown.

I should have stopped there. But I kept reading and found a recipe that used “sirup.” Its instruction said recipes that use “sirup” must be boiled to 248° and since my friggin’ recipe used a QUART of “sirup” I needed to stay the longer course.

My friends, I am no longer ashamed to admit that I set my Polder for 241° and when that buzzer went off at 8:50 pm, so did I. I was FINISHED with making caramels. Done. Finito. La fin. I added the vanilla and the nuts and whirled it with a mixer to blend. I dumped it out into a buttered12x16” pan at 9:10 PM, cleaned the kitchen and went to bed.

This morning I tested it and it is delicious, but it is not—and never will be—caramel candy. So when life gives you lemons, just say “what the hell” and make sixteen jars of chewy pecan caramel sauce.

 
Seriously, I have not laughed so hard in days. Such great stories.

Loved the one about the can exploding in the oven. I can just see all that caramel dripping everywhere. What a mess.

I'm such a cautious cook that I don't really have any good disaster stories. Although one time we had friends over for dinner and I clean forgot to cook the potatoes. (I served pate, coq au vin with little red boiled potatoes, a green salad, and lots of french bread. Dessert was Chocolate Mousse with Honey.) We went through about five loaves of french bread--I wondered why everyone was eating so much bread! My husband found the potatoes in the pantry--all scrubbed and ready to go--brought them out and asked, "Did you forget something?" Everyone roared with laughter.

 
Love it, Moyn wrote to Cyn,"you gave that lobster the finger!", I can't stop giggling!!!!

 
speaking of potatoes in the pantry, I once upon a time lived in Pensacola Fla

and was newly married and did some things just like my Mom, like keep the potatoes in the pantry in the big roaster. Well, forgetting the potatoes for weeks in humid Florida in the pantry made for a god awful smelly mess.

 
"Ay, there's the rub..." said Hamlet to the barbequing Rosencrantz....

I just submitted a short blurb on flinging chocolate (not the never-ending tome above on my inability to make candy). The text beside the personal data fields says "your email will allow you to access your membership."

Ah.

Apparently, to see these entries online, you'll have to be a paying member to their website.

No freebies in this world....unless you win and they give you a free online membership along with yearly subscription.

 
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